Starboard Value disclosed a stake in Wix.com, the Tel Aviv-based website builder trading at $8.2 billion market cap, marking the activist's first major public move into Israeli SaaS infrastructure. The position size remains undisclosed pending regulatory filings, but Starboard's entrance follows Wix shares declining 31% from their 2021 highs despite revenue growing 12% year-over-year to $1.6 billion in trailing twelve months. The firm's involvement signals classic operational triage: Wix operates at 22% EBITDA margins while peers like Shopify run closer to 28%, and the company employs roughly 6,000 people across nine global offices.
Starboard managing member Peter Feld typically deploys a sixty-to-ninety-day diagnostic before surfacing specific restructuring asks. The firm's recent portfolio work at Splunk, Box, and GoDaddy followed identical patterns—efficiency audits, executive turnover within six months, and margin expansion targets in the 400-to-600 basis point range. Wix presents clean restructuring surface area: the company runs parallel product lines for different market segments without full infrastructure consolidation, maintains overlapping sales teams in North America and EMEA, and has pursued eleven acquisitions since 2018 without meaningful cost synergy capture. Chief Executive Avishai Abrahami, who co-founded Wix in 2006 and took it public in 2013, now faces his first external capital pressure.
The timing matters because Wix sits between two market forces. Small business formation rates dropped 18% in Q4 2024 versus the pandemic peak, pressuring Wix's core freemium funnel where 85% of new users start on free plans. Meanwhile, enterprise website solutions from Webflow and Squarespace gained $340 million in combined net-new ARR last year by moving upmarket with developer-friendly tools. Wix attempted its own enterprise push through Wix Studio, launched in May 2023, but the product has captured only 11% of new bookings despite heavier R&D investment. Starboard will almost certainly target this resource allocation mismatch—companies burning capital on low-conversion enterprise bets while the core SMB segment faces secular headwinds rarely survive activist review without surgery.
Allocators should watch for three specific developments. First, proxy advisory filings in the next 45-60 days will show whether Starboard is pursuing board seats or negotiating operating changes through private settlement. Second, Wix's next earnings call in late April will reveal whether management preemptively announces restructuring to contain activist demands—look for revised full-year EBITDA guidance or headcount reduction targets. Third, executive recruiting activity at the COO and CFO level will signal whether Abrahami retains operating control or cedes authority to a Starboard-endorsed operator, typically a former PE portfolio executive with SaaS turnaround credentials.
Starboard holds positions for 18-to-36 months and exits once margin targets print for two consecutive quarters, which means Wix now operates on a reorg clock whether or not management publicly acknowledges the shift.